Penn State Football Spring Practice Primer: Offensive Position Breakdown

Matt McGloin (11) and Rob Bolden will compete for the starting quarterback position this spring. Photo by Dave Cole, Onward State.

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This is the first in a two-part series previewing the position breakdown of Penn State’s football team heading into spring practice, which starts Monday. Saturday’s installment takes a look at the offense.

Naturally, much of the focus will be on the quarterback position, but does anyone have to do more evaluation than first-year offensive line coach Mac McWhorter?

“I wasn't smart enough to ask Coach O'Brien that before I took the job,” McWhorter quipped last month. He was coaxed out of retirement following 37 years of coaching to work under first-year head coach Bill O’Brien.

Penn State is thin on experience up front. Only center Matt Stankiewitch returns from a unit that led the Big Ten in fewest sacks allowed. On the bright side, that’s half the battery for whoever lines up at quarterback, so there's some level of comfort.

Penn State has many options up front; the question is can any of them perform.

Redshirt freshman tackle Donovan Smith (6-foot-5, 310 pounds) will get a lot of buzz this spring because of his size, but McWhorter has said he's looking for nimble linemen whose size does not forsake athleticism.

Unlike most units on this team, little, if anything noteworthy, is known at this juncture.

Quarterback

Key losses: None

Key returnees: RS Sr. Matt McGloin, Jr. Rob Bolden

McGloin and Bolden each have more than a season’s worth of experience, but here’s where it gets ugly: McGloin completed just 54.1 percent of his passes last season for 1,571 yards, eight touchdowns and five interceptions. Bolden completed 39.3 percent of his passes for 685 yards, two touchdowns and seven interceptions.

And here's where it gets uglier: Against teams ranked in the AP Top 25, McGloin completed 42.6 percent of his passes. Bolden completed 32.3 percent his passes.

Redshirt sophomore Paul Jones is the third quarterback that will split first-team reps throughout the spring, but he hasn’t seen any game action mainly because of academic issues.

The annual Maple Harvest Festival and Pancake Breakfast, started in 1984, has since become a springtime staple in the State College area. It'll return from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the environmental center, in Barree Township, Huntingdon County.